Nelson Mail

Libyan poll anger erupts

-

Benghazi, Libya – Armed protesters calling for more autonomy for Libya’s east stormed the national election commission in Benghazi yesterday, burning materials and breaking computer equipment outside, less than a week before the North African country holds an election.

About 300 men carried computers and ballot boxes from the building in Libya’s second city and began crushing them while chanting pro-federalism slogans, a Reuters correspond­ent at the scene said.

‘‘They ran into our building, set fire to some of our offices and broke our computers and the furniture,’’ said Haitham alTaboly, who works for the election commission. ‘‘We lost most of the administra­tive material we have worked on for months, but we hope we can retrieve some of it before the elections using backup storage.’’

The violence follows a series of security breaches in the coastal city, which was the cradle of last year’s uprising that ended Muammar Gaddafi’s 42-year rule, adding to concerns of how safe Libya’s first free elections this weekend will be.

Candidates, voters and election commission officials have called on the government to beef up security for the polls, which will elect a national assembly, to ensure the legitimacy of the vote.

Piles of voting lists, ballot papers and other documents burned at the gates to the election commission. Smoke billowed out of some of the windows in the building.

Taboly said the protesters were chanting for an equal number of seats in the 200-strong national assembly. The ruling National Transition­al Council assigned 102 seats for Tripoli and 38 for the east according to population density of the regions.

The glass doors and windows of the commission were shattered and security forces cordoned off the area.

‘‘There wasn’t enough security at the gates of the com- mission to stop the protesters, so they had to step back and let them storm the building,’’ said Emad Al-Sayeh, deputy head of the High National Election Commission in Tripoli.

Commission spokesman Saleh Darhoub said the main poll materials had not been damaged as they were stored in a secure a place. ‘‘This will not affect the vote date,’’ he said.

The vote is a crucial milestone in shaping Libya’s new institutio­ns after last year’s revolt. The Council of Cyrenaica, which wants autonomy for the eastern region, said it wanted guarantees of fair representa­tion for the provinces.

The protesters tore up posters and carried signs that read ‘‘Mustafa Abdel Jalil is a traitor of Cyrenaica’’, referring to the commission chairman. Graffiti reading ‘‘Cyrenaica Headquarte­rs’’ was painted .

In May, a self-proclaimed autonomous council for Libya’s oil-producing eastern province called for an election boycott.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand